Heavy metal contamination in the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberian Arctic

The Taimyr Peninsula is directly north of the world's largest heavy metal smelting complex (Norilsk, Russia). Despite this proximity, there has been little research to examine the extent of contamination of the Taimyr Peninsula. We analyzed heavy metal concentrations in lichen (Cetraria cuculla...

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Main Authors: Allen-Gil, S. M., Ford, J., Lasorsa, B. K., Monetti, M., Vlasova, T., Landers, D. H.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Digital Commons IC 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/scopus_articles/2134
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spelling ftithacacollege:oai:digitalcommons.ithaca.edu:scopus_articles-3133 2023-05-15T14:46:34+02:00 Heavy metal contamination in the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberian Arctic Allen-Gil, S. M. Ford, J. Lasorsa, B. K. Monetti, M. Vlasova, T. Landers, D. H. 2003-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/scopus_articles/2134 unknown Digital Commons IC https://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/scopus_articles/2134 Faculty Articles Indexed in Scopus Arctic Fish Metals Russia Sediment Vegetation text 2003 ftithacacollege 2022-02-28T19:42:54Z The Taimyr Peninsula is directly north of the world's largest heavy metal smelting complex (Norilsk, Russia). Despite this proximity, there has been little research to examine the extent of contamination of the Taimyr Peninsula. We analyzed heavy metal concentrations in lichen (Cetraria cucullata), moss (Hylocomium splendens), soils, lake sediment, freshwater fish (Salvelinus alpinus, Lota lota and Coregonus spp.) and collared lemming (Dicrostonyx torquatus) from 13 sites between 30 and 300 km from Norilsk. Element concentrations were low in both C. cucullata and H. splendens, although concentrations of Al, Fe, Cu, Ni and Pb were significantly higher than those in Arctic Alaska, probably due to natural differences in the geochemical environments. Inorganic surface soils had significantly higher concentrations of Cd, Zn, Pb and Mg than inorganic soils at depth, although a lake sediment core from the eastern Taimyr Peninsula indicated no recent enrichment by atmospherically transported elements. Tissue concentrations of heavy metals in fish and lemming were not elevated relative to other Arctic sites. Our results show that the impact of the Norilsk smelting complex is primarily localized rather than regional, and does not extend northward beyond 100 km. © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Text Arctic Dicrostonyx torquatus Lota lota norilsk Salvelinus alpinus Taimyr Alaska lota Ithaca College: Digital Commons @ IC Arctic Norilsk ENVELOPE(88.203,88.203,69.354,69.354)
institution Open Polar
collection Ithaca College: Digital Commons @ IC
op_collection_id ftithacacollege
language unknown
topic Arctic
Fish
Metals
Russia
Sediment
Vegetation
spellingShingle Arctic
Fish
Metals
Russia
Sediment
Vegetation
Allen-Gil, S. M.
Ford, J.
Lasorsa, B. K.
Monetti, M.
Vlasova, T.
Landers, D. H.
Heavy metal contamination in the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberian Arctic
topic_facet Arctic
Fish
Metals
Russia
Sediment
Vegetation
description The Taimyr Peninsula is directly north of the world's largest heavy metal smelting complex (Norilsk, Russia). Despite this proximity, there has been little research to examine the extent of contamination of the Taimyr Peninsula. We analyzed heavy metal concentrations in lichen (Cetraria cucullata), moss (Hylocomium splendens), soils, lake sediment, freshwater fish (Salvelinus alpinus, Lota lota and Coregonus spp.) and collared lemming (Dicrostonyx torquatus) from 13 sites between 30 and 300 km from Norilsk. Element concentrations were low in both C. cucullata and H. splendens, although concentrations of Al, Fe, Cu, Ni and Pb were significantly higher than those in Arctic Alaska, probably due to natural differences in the geochemical environments. Inorganic surface soils had significantly higher concentrations of Cd, Zn, Pb and Mg than inorganic soils at depth, although a lake sediment core from the eastern Taimyr Peninsula indicated no recent enrichment by atmospherically transported elements. Tissue concentrations of heavy metals in fish and lemming were not elevated relative to other Arctic sites. Our results show that the impact of the Norilsk smelting complex is primarily localized rather than regional, and does not extend northward beyond 100 km. © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
format Text
author Allen-Gil, S. M.
Ford, J.
Lasorsa, B. K.
Monetti, M.
Vlasova, T.
Landers, D. H.
author_facet Allen-Gil, S. M.
Ford, J.
Lasorsa, B. K.
Monetti, M.
Vlasova, T.
Landers, D. H.
author_sort Allen-Gil, S. M.
title Heavy metal contamination in the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberian Arctic
title_short Heavy metal contamination in the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberian Arctic
title_full Heavy metal contamination in the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberian Arctic
title_fullStr Heavy metal contamination in the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberian Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Heavy metal contamination in the Taimyr Peninsula, Siberian Arctic
title_sort heavy metal contamination in the taimyr peninsula, siberian arctic
publisher Digital Commons IC
publishDate 2003
url https://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/scopus_articles/2134
long_lat ENVELOPE(88.203,88.203,69.354,69.354)
geographic Arctic
Norilsk
geographic_facet Arctic
Norilsk
genre Arctic
Dicrostonyx torquatus
Lota lota
norilsk
Salvelinus alpinus
Taimyr
Alaska
lota
genre_facet Arctic
Dicrostonyx torquatus
Lota lota
norilsk
Salvelinus alpinus
Taimyr
Alaska
lota
op_source Faculty Articles Indexed in Scopus
op_relation https://digitalcommons.ithaca.edu/scopus_articles/2134
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